ALICEVILLE HAS BEEN A GREAT PLACE TO CALL HOME SINCE 1907

In 1902, Mr. John Taylor Cochrane purchased some land on which Aliceville now sets. He had the land surveyed into lots, blocks, and streets that were laid out in an orderly plan. He was also one of the organizers of the town’s first bank, Aliceville Bank and Trust, and served as its first president. The new town was then incorporated as a municipality of the State of Alabama on March 18, 1907.

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Perk Coffee Bar

Perk Coffee Bar is officially opened for business. Perk is located in the heart of Aliceville at 220 Broad Street NE. Stop in for a variety of specialty drinks and baked treats. Perk is opened Monday-Friday from 6:00am-4pm and Saturdays 8:00am-4:00pm. The grand opening of Perk will take place on Saturday, July 15th so mark your calendar!

Your Elected Officials

Mayor

Marva D. Gipson

City Council

District 1 - Thomas Fitzgerald Wilkins

District 2 - Warren E. Lavender II

District 3 - Terrence Windham

District 4 - Robert Wilder

District 5 - Donald Max Allen

OUR SCHOOLS

Aliceville has its own elementary, middle, and high schools in the Pickens County school system. Our citizens love cheering on the Yellow Jacket football team each week in the fall. The mission statement for Aliceville High School is "Inspiring ethical leaders...one child at a time." We are also nearby to Pickens Academy, a private school offering quality education since 1970.

TOGETHER WE GROW

The Aliceville Area Chamber of Commerce was organized in 1924 with the goal of fostering growth and well-being to industrial, agricultural and overall commercial interests of Aliceville and surrounding areas. We strive to promote the civic, economic and social welfare of the citizens of the Aliceville Area.

CAMP ALICEVILLE WAR CAMP

The construction of Camp Aliceville began in August 1942 and was completed by December. The camp began receiving German POWs, at first mostly from Erwin Rommel's Afrika Corps, in June 1943. It comprised 400 wood-frame barracks, which could hold as many as 6,000 prisoners and 900 Army personnel. Aliceville was the largest of the eleven POW camps in the Southeastern U.S. By the end of the war Camp Aliceville held German prisoners captured in many different locations. September 30, 1945. The camp was dismantled and sold for scrap after the war, and its only remaining trace is an old stone chimney.